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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> MS (Uganda) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2016] UKSC 33 (22 June 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2016/33.html Cite as: [2016] UKSC 33, [2016] 1 WLR 2615, [2016] WLR 2615, [2016] Imm AR 1330, [2016] INLR 577 |
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[2016] UKSC 33
On appeal from: [2014] EWCA Civ 50
JUDGMENT
MS (Uganda) (Appellant) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (Respondent)
before
Lord Neuberger, President
Lady Hale, Deputy President
Lord Wilson
Lord Hughes
Lord Toulson
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
22 June 2016
Heard on 12 May 2016
Appellant Michael Biggs (Instructed by Migrants Resource Centre) |
|
Respondent James Eadie QC Mathew Gullick (Instructed by The Government Legal Department) |
LORD HUGHES: (with whom Lord Neuberger, Lady Hale, Lord Wilson and Lord Toulson agree)
1. The issue in this case concerns the true meaning and ambit of the additional right of appeal specific to asylum claims which was given by section 83 of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 (“NIAA 2002”). That section has now been repealed by section 15(3) of the Immigration Act 2014 and replaced by a wider right of appeal. It remains, however, in force for the present appellant, and perhaps for some others. The Court of Appeal gave permission, before the Immigration Act 2014 had been passed, for the present appeal to be brought to this court: [2014] 1 WLR 2766.
3. However, if an appeal under section 82 existed because there was also an immigration decision of one of the kinds listed, the claimant was expressly entitled by section 84(1)(g) to raise the argument that his removal would put this country in breach of its obligations under the Refugee Convention. By this somewhat circuitous but effective route a right of appeal against refusal of asylum in practice existed under the NIAA 2002, as under previous legislation, if there was an immigration decision to appeal under section 82. Generally, there was. But it might happen that there was not if, for example, when the asylum claim was refused by the Home Secretary, leave to remain was granted. In that event, the continued presence of the claimant would be lawful and there would be no occasion for an appeal under section 82, under which the question of refugee status could be determined. The issue of refugee status is significant, because some legal consequences flow from it if it is held to exist. It was not that uncommon for those whose asylum claims failed nevertheless to be granted limited leave to remain; a simple example was unaccompanied minors who were and are very often granted leave to remain until they reach the age of majority, in order to avoid removing children who have no sufficient family or other support: see TN (Afghanistan) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2015] UKSC 40; [2015] 1 WLR 3083.
“83. Appeal: asylum claim
(1) This section applies where a person has made an asylum claim and -
(a) his claim has been rejected by the Secretary of State, but
(b) he has been granted leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom for a period exceeding one year (or for periods exceeding one year in aggregate).
(2) The person may appeal to the Tribunal against the rejection of his asylum claim.”
8. The appellant’s case runs as follows.
i) Section 83 gives a general right of appeal to those whose claim to refugee status has been refused.
ii) The limitation upon that right of appeal constituted by subsection (1)(b) should be broadly rather than narrowly construed, since refugee status is a matter of significance and engages this country’s international obligations to permit a properly qualified claimant to exercise the rights secured by the Convention. Nor should a construction be adopted which restricts the appellant’s right of access to the tribunal.
iii) The natural meaning of section 83 is that any grant(s) of leave to remain totalling more than 12 months bring the claimant within the section and afford him the right of appeal. It matters not whether the grant of leave to remain came before or after the refusal of the asylum claim. Indeed, a grant or grants which had expired before the asylum claim was made would also do so.
iv) The alternative construction advanced by the Secretary of State and upheld by the Court of Appeal, namely that subsection (1)(b) applies only to grant(s) of leave to remain made after the refusal of the asylum claim would be tantamount to making the right of appeal hinge on the leave to remain decision rather than, as it is clearly designed to do, on the decision to refuse asylum.
(i) any grant(s) of leave to remain totalling more than 12 months bring the claimant within the section, whenever they occurred and whether or not they had expired before the asylum claim was made and determined; this was the appellant’s primary case;
(ii) grant(s) of leave to remain totalling more than 12 months bring the claimant within the section providing such leave is still current at the time of the determination of the asylum claim; this was the appellant’s alternative position;
(iii) grant(s) of leave to remain bring the claimant within the section providing that such leave totalled more than 12 months counting from the date of refusal or later grant, and whether the grant(s) were made before or after refusal; this was the alternative contention of the Secretary of State if her principal one ((iv) below) failed;
(iv) grant(s) of leave to remain totalling more than 12 months bring the claimant within the section if but only if they (and all of them if more than one) are either contemporaneous with or post-date the determination of the asylum claim; this was the Secretary of State’s primary case and was adopted by the Upper Tribunal and the Court of Appeal.
11. At one time in the past the Secretary of State contended in cases concerning section 83 that the wording used demanded that there be a nexus between the refusal of the asylum claim and the grant of more than 12 months’ limited leave. In other words, it was contended that the one must be logically connected to the other. That contention was rejected by Beatson J, as he then was, at first instance in AS (Somalia) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2011] EWHC 627 (Admin). In that case, AS had arrived as an unaccompanied minor. He had made two asylum claims. The first had been rejected in November 2006 but he had been granted limited leave to remain for approximately four months until he was 18. Subsequently, he applied to extend that leave, and in addition made a second claim to be adjudged a refugee. The second asylum claim was never determined but the claimant was, three years after it was made, granted indefinite leave to remain. Thus there was no more than 12 months’ leave associated with the first refusal of asylum, and no refusal of asylum associated with the much later grant of indefinite leave. The judge held that AS was within section 83 and on appeal the Secretary of State abandoned the argument to the contrary. The Court of Appeal [2011] EWCA Civ 1319; [2012] INLR 332 (per Sullivan LJ) rightly recorded at para 17 that this was plainly correct. The fact that section 83 brings within its provisions the case of multiple grants of leave totalling 12 months shows that there does not have to be a nexus between the refusal of asylum and the grant(s). In the present case, Mr Eadie QC for the Secretary of State correctly disclaimed the argument for “nexus”. To the extent that the Upper Tribunal in the present case, giving judgment without sight of AS (Somalia), founded in part on the need for nexus, it was wrong.
“First, the Secretary of State may certify a claim [under section 82] as clearly unfounded under section 94, and where she does this it precludes any in-country right of appeal. This does not apply to an asylum rejection under section 83. Second, section 96 allows the Secretary of State to prevent repetitious appeals if the grounds advanced ought to have been made in response to an earlier decision. Again, this power can only be exercised with respect to section 82 appeals and does not apply to section 83 appeals. Third, by section 78, where an appeal is lodged under section 82, the appellant may not be removed until it is determined. That benefit does not extend to appeals under section 83.”
“(1) This section applies where -
(a) a person has made an asylum claim,
(b) he was granted limited leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom as a refugee within the meaning of the Refugee Convention,
(c) a decision is made that he is not a refugee, and
(d) following the decision specified in para (c) he has limited leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom otherwise than as a refugee.”
17. The appellant’s second difficulty is that his primary case would mean that a past and expired grant of limited leave opened the door to this appeal against refusal of asylum when there is no conceivable reason why it should. On construction (i) a claimant would be within section 83 if, 20 years ago, he had been a student in the UK, enjoying a grant of limited leave to remain for something over a year, had then left this country and had returned only recently, on whatever basis (or none) but without more than 12 months leave to remain, whereupon he had made an asylum claim. There would be no possible reason why his historical experience of lawful residence for over 12 months should have any bearing at all on whether he had a separate right of appeal under section 83, as distinct from having only the same right that most asylum claimants have, namely to raise his refugee claim in a section 82 appeal. Mr Biggs realistically did not advance the argument which has been ventilated at earlier stages in this or other cases, namely that the history of previous lawful residence is meant to bring such a claimant within section 83 on the grounds that it demonstrates some connection with the UK and a consequent claim on a preferential procedure. There appears no conceivable reason why Parliament should have meant to provide a claimant in this position with a separate section 83 right of appeal. An expired grant of leave fell to be considered in R (Omondi) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2009] EWHC 827 (Admin) and Judge Ockelton, sitting as a deputy judge of the High Court, drawing on marked experience of immigration practicalities, reached the same conclusion.
21. The purpose of section 83 is tolerably clear. It is to provide an additional - and more targeted - right of appeal beyond the ordinary one created by section 82. It is to provide a vehicle for the determination by the tribunal of refugee status, when that status is asserted but rejected by the Secretary of State, in those cases where no such vehicle otherwise exists, nor will exist within a reasonable time. In the straightforward case of an asylum claim which is rejected and no other basis for remaining in the UK exists, there will follow a removal decision which generates a right of appeal under section 82, and on that appeal the claimant will succeed if he shows that he is entitled to refugee status. In the case of a person, such as an unaccompanied minor, whose asylum claim is refused, but who is granted a short period of leave to remain, there will in the relatively near future either be a further grant of leave to remain or there will be a refusal of it and a decision to remove. At that foreseeably proximate stage, there will, unless leave is extended, again arise a right of appeal under section 82 in which refugee status, if established, will guarantee success. Section 83 is designed to create an extra right of appeal for those who have a longer period of leave to remain and who would otherwise have no section 82 vehicle which they could use. As Upper Tribunal Judge Clive Lane concisely put it in the Upper Tribunal, section 83 is aimed at this class of applicant, so that he should not be deprived of his right to challenge the refusal of his asylum claim where that refusal is not accompanied by a decision to remove him. In FA (Iraq) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2010] EWCA Civ 696; [2010] 1 WLR 2545, paras 13 and 30 both Longmore and Pill LJJ expressed the same idea when they observed that section 83 was aimed at people in whose cases the Secretary of State would not be reconsidering the immigration position in the near future. In TN (Afghanistan) at para 32, Lord Toulson referred to the additional consideration that where conditions in the home country may be fluctuating rapidly, it makes good sense for tribunals not to become clogged with cases which are due to be reviewed before long in any event.
25. The fact that the provisions of section 96 for prevention of repetitious appeals do not apply to an appeal within section 83 is no indication to the contrary. As was pointed out in both the Administrative Court and the Court of Appeal in AS (Somalia), where one of the claimants had previously made an unsuccessful asylum claim, the making of an unmeritorious second claim by a claimant who is lawfully here, whilst it is to be discouraged, is not to be equated with the kind of desperate application which is likely to be made by those who are under threat of removal, and it does not stand in the same need of active measures to prevent it. Moreover, since a tribunal considering a second asylum claim will, in accordance with Devaseelan v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2002] UKIAT 702; [2003] Imm AR 1, begin by assuming the correctness of the first decision and thus look for fresh or different considerations not previously assessed, an undeserving second claim need not detain the appellate system for an unacceptable time. That was Mr Ockelton’s view in Abiyat (rights of appeal) Iran [2011] UKUT 00314 (IAC); [2012] INLR 131, a view endorsed by Sullivan LJ in AS (Somalia) at para 40.
29. These several additional reasons all support what is both a natural reading of section 83 and most consistent with its purpose, namely that the proper construction is (iii), as explained in para 22 above. Since the remaining period of leave which the present appellant enjoyed was well short of the period of more than 12 months from refusal of his asylum claim required by section 83, he did not fall within the section. It follows that the appeal must be dismissed, although not quite for the reasons given by the Court of Appeal. It, like the Upper Tribunal in Win (section 83 - order of events) [2012] UKUT 365 (IAC); [2013] Imm AR 154 went further than it should have done by adopting construction (iv); it is not clear that construction (iii) was put before either court, and the appellants in both cases failed to meet the test whichever was adopted.